Posts in School
The Best Stickers For Your Teacher Plan Book

One thing that we do to beautify our planners is add an assortment of stickers. It helps us to prepare for the year ahead, and it provides something pretty to look at on those days that teaching is particularly stressful or demanding. When it comes to planner stickers, not all are created equal. In the two plus decades we have been teaching, we have narrowed down our absolute favorite sticker brands and sales for our plan books.

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Book Review: Cultivating Genius: An Equity Framework for Culturally and Historically Responsive Literacy

One book that we highly recommend to help guide the implementation of culturally responsive teaching practices into your classroom is Cultivating Genius: An Equity Framework for Culturally and Historically Responsive Literacy by Dr. Gholdy Muhammad. In the book, Dr. Muhammad provides a four part Historically Responsive Literacy Framework that “is essential for all students, especially youth of color, who traditionally have been marginalized in learning standards, school policies, and classroom practices.”

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Creating a Class Community While Social Distancing

Physical touch is a huge part of learning and creating a classroom community. I’m talking high-fives and pats on the back. Students giving each other hugs or, if they’re younger, their teachers a hug. Sharing supplies with each other, lending a helping hand, sitting knee to knee during circle time. How can students and teachers build a class community when humans rely so much on touch, yet right now, that physical touch is not allowed?

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Early Signs of a Learning Disability - What to Look For in the Early Grades

There is a common misconception that learning disabilities only start to appear and can be tested starting in 3rd grade at the earliest. Here is the problem with that: students with learning disabilities have differences in the structure and function of their brains. This doesn’t happen in 3rd grade. The sooner students can get help for their learning disability, the sooner the issues can be corrected allowing for students to need less specialized instruction in the upper grades. When is it time to ask for help?

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